Central banks aren't buying gold like they used to do
“There is still no appetite for sales, but outside of Russia and China few purchasers either," Matthew Turner and his team wrote in a note this week.

The world's central banks are still net buyers of gold, but they may be slowing down those purchases. Central banks bought an estimated 166 tonnes of gold and sold 22 tonnes in the first half of 2016, according to Macquarie analysts, making a net purchase of 144 tonnes. This was not much changed from the net purchases they made in 2013 and 2014, but it was less than the 179 tonnes they bought at the same time last year, Matthew Turner and his team wrote in a note this week.
“There is still no appetite for sales, but outside of Russia and China few purchasers either,“ Turner wrote. “The outlook is for lower but still substantive net purchases.“
“Central banks remained on the buy side of the gold market in 1H 2016, though Venezuela's falling reserves were or will become a drag,“ Turner wrote.
Download ET Markets APP